Public release date: 12-Mar-2003

New Scientist issue: 15th March 2003
http://www.newscientist.com/news/news.jsp?id=ns99993488

The World's First Brain Prosthesis

By DUNCAN GRAHAM-ROWE

AN ARTIFICIAL hippocampus, the world's first brain prosthesis, is about to
be tested in California. Unlike devices like cochlear implants, which
merely stimulate brain activity, this silicon chip implant will perform the
same processes as the damaged part of the brain it is replacing. The
prosthesis will first be tested on tissue from rats' brains, and then on
live animals. If all goes well, it will then be tested as a way to help
people who have suffered brain damage due to stroke, epilepsy or
Alzheimer's disease.

Any device that mimics the brain clearly raises ethical issues. The brain
not only affects memory, but your mood, awareness and consciousness - parts
of your fundamental identity, says ethicist Joel Anderson at Washington
University in St Louis, Missouri.

The researchers developing the brain prosthesis see it as a test case. "If
you can't do it with the hippocampus you can't do it with anything," says
team leader Theodore Berger of the University of Southern California in Los
Angeles. The hippocampus is the most ordered and structured part of the
brain, and one of the most studied. Importantly, it is also relatively easy
to test its function.

The job of the hippocampus appears to be to "encode" experiences so they
can be stored as long-term memories elsewhere in the brain. "If you lose
your hippocampus you only lose the ability to store new memories," says
Berger. That offers a relatively simple and safe way to test the device: if
someone with the prosthesis regains the ability to store new memories, then
it's safe to assume it works.

The inventors of the prosthesis had to overcome three major hurdles. They
had to devise a mathematical model of how the hippocampus performs under
all possible conditions, build that model into a silicon chip, and then
interface the chip with the brain.

No one understands how the hippocampus encodes information. So the team
simply copied its behaviour. Slices of rat hippocampus were stimulated with
electrical signals, millions of times over, until they could be sure which
electrical input produces a corresponding output. Putting the information
from various slices together gave the team a mathematical model of the
entire hippocampus.

They then programmed the model onto a chip, which in a human patient would
sit on the skull rather than inside the brain. It communicates with the
brain through two arrays of electrodes, placed on either side of the
damaged area. One records the electrical activity coming in from the rest
of the brain, while the other sends appropriate electrical instructions
back out to the brain. The hippocampus can be thought of as a series of
similar neural circuits that work in parallel, says Berger, so it should be
possible to bypass the damaged region entirely (see Graphic).

Berger and his team have taken nearly 10 years to develop the chip. They
are about to test it on slices of rat brain kept alive in cerebrospinal
fluid, they will tell a neural engineering conference in Capri, Italy, next
week. "It's a very important step because it's the first time we have put
all the pieces together," he says. The work was funded by the US National
Science Foundation, Office of Naval Research and Defense Advanced Research
Projects Agency.

If it works, the team will test the prosthesis in live rats within six
months, and then in monkeys trained to carry out memory tasks. The
researchers will stop part of the monkey's hippocampus working and bypass
it with the chip. "The real proof will be if the animal's behaviour changes
or is maintained," says Sam Deadwyler of Wake Forest University in
Winston-Salem, North Carolina, who will conduct the animal trials.

The hippocampus has a similar structure in most mammals, says Deadwyler, so
little will have to be changed to adapt the technology for people. But
before human trials begin, the team will have to prove unequivocally that
the prosthesis is safe.

One drawback is that it will inevitably bypass some healthy brain tissue.
But this should not affect the patient's memories, says Berger. "It would
be no different from removing brain tumours," where there is always some
collateral damage, says Bernard Williams, a philosopher at Britain's
University of Oxford, who is an expert in personal identity.

Anderson points out that it will take time for people to accept the
technology. "Initially people thought heart transplants were an abomination
because they assumed that having the heart you were born with was an
important part of who you are."

While trials on monkeys will tell us a lot about the prosthesis's
performance, there are some questions that won't be answered. For example,
it is unclear whether we have any control over what we remember. If we do,
would brain implants of the future force some people to remember things
they would rather forget?

The ethical consequences of that would be serious. "Forgetting is the most
beneficial process we possess," Williams says. It enables us to deal with
painful situations without actually reliving them.

Another ethical conundrum concerns consent to being given the prosthesis,
says Anderson. The people most in need of it will be those with a damaged
hippocampus and a reduced ability to form new memories. "If someone can't
form new memories, then to what extent can they give consent to have this
implant?"


--
Han Tacoma

~ Artificial Intelligence is better than none! ~
a.k.a. ~ Bionic Brain ~

_______________________________________________
http://www.mccmedia.com/mailman/listinfo/brin-l

Reply via email to